I think this is just a bit of a sociological investigation, mso489 certainly didn't post it with any ill intent, he's simply curious about some of the involved parameters of things, and I thank him for bringing the subject up, I think it's worth discussing at least,
can we not have a dialogue here?
I'm very interested in the arc of preferences for certain tobaccos throughout pipesmoking history and it's a legitimate line of discourse I'd reckon.
Why, for example, did the average British pipesmoker develop a taste for sauced and steamed dark flakes?
A lot of it has to do with manufacturer technique, marketing, and cultural dimensions.
But these preferences don't define us, and we're talking averages here, no pigeon-holes exist in pipeland, which is one reason it's still a magical exercise, and offers a broad range of experiences to a wide range of different folks, with different tastes and different objectives.
It's undeniable that at some point a majority of pipesmokers in the USA shifted from natural blends to more sauced blends, and for the most part I think we're talking about the easily available drugstore variety of aromatics, not really the world-class aros out there today.
When people enjoy pipesmoking, it should be celebrated in whatever form it takes, it matters not what pipe or tobacco is the prime choice, but the act itself, of which we are all enjoying for the same reason, regardless of our particular preferences.
Us online forum enthusiasts exist in a hyperreal world, if you will, exploring and talking about all the myriad nuances and all that jazz, whereas the "average" pipesmoker exists in the real world, smoking his pipe with complete happiness with whichever blends he has chosen and feels no need to go on the computer and be an "internetdummy" (a funny term I read in a recent tobacco review), some people can be completely content and other people can become somewhat obsessive about it all, and it's all good either way methinks.